On October 24, a shipment of US$52,000 and 7.5 tons of rice nuts weighing 7.5 tons was successfully exported to Australia. It was received from the Inspection and Quarantine Bureau of Changzhou, Jiangsu Province, that at present, the rice fruits produced by Jiangsu Desheng Food are exported to Australia and New Zealand. Its share of the Oceania market has reached about 20%, accounting for about 50% of the company's total exports. Jiangsu Changzhou Inspection and Quarantine helped the company successfully seize the Oceania market in a highly competitive trade environment.
The enterprise is located in Liyang, Jiangsu Province, which is known as the "hometown of fish and rice" in beautiful mountains and rivers. According to Ms. Chen, the person in charge of the enterprise, Desheng Food mainly produces natural puffed rice food with glutinous rice and japonica rice as the main raw materials. As a popular snack, miko is deeply loved by the public and once sold well in Europe, America and Japan. In recent years, with the impact of international trade barriers, labor and raw material costs rising year by year and other factors, the European and American markets have gradually deteriorated, and enterprises have been in trouble.
After learning about the situation, the Changzhou Inspection and Quarantine Bureau of Jiangsu Province implemented the "strong quality delivery service" program, and made a two-pronged approach to help enterprises get out of the predicament and turn to the new market. First, strong quality. By strengthening the supervision mode of source supervision, process control, classification management, and rapid inspection and release, we will ensure the quality of export products and the efficiency of customs clearance. The second is the delivery service. Changzhou Bureau designated a special person to publicize the latest preferential certificate of origin policy of the free trade zone to enterprises, combined with China's free trade zone strategy, to help enterprises analyze the potential markets of various countries, and suggested that enterprises turn "passive visas" into "active applications", and actively introduce and apply for corresponding preferential certificates of origin for new customers to expand exports and open up new markets.
From January to October 2017, Jiangsu Changzhou Inspection and Quarantine Bureau issued a total of 173 China-Australia-China-Singapore (New Zealand) Preferential Certificates of Origin for Desheng Food, with a value of US$4.2723 million, and the number and amount of visas increased by 24.5% and 33.5% respectively year-on-year, saving about US$213,600 in customs duties for customers. (Zhou Xiang)